You are here
Home 🌿 Cannabis Technology News 🌿 The 'Tesla of Cannabis' Is Opening a Massive, Custom-Built Marijuana Greenhouse 🌿The 'Tesla of Cannabis' Is Opening a Massive, Custom-Built Marijuana Greenhouse

A marijuana cultivator that's been called the "Tesla of cannabis" is bringing the industry out of the darkness and into the light — literally.
Tantalus Labs, which could start selling product as early as 2018, has wrapped construction on a state-of-the-art cultivation site designed to give marijuana plants the benefits of indoor and outdoor growing. The greenhouse lets sunlight pour in, enabling the plants to grow fuller buds faster.
Shafin Diamond, a prominent Canadian angel investor, gave Tantalus Labs the moniker "Tesla of cannabis" because of the company's dedication to pioneering new, sustainable technologies. Like the company behind electric cars and aesthetically appealing solar panels, Tantalus Labs optimizes for environmental stewardship.
(Courtesy of Tantalus Labs)
Marijuana grows well in the outdoors. However, the vast majority of legal cannabis cultivation sites grow their marijuana in indoor facilities.
"Why is it that this industry was driven indoors? The core reason was stealth," Dan Sutton, founder and managing director of Tantalus Labs, says. "It's a lot easier to hide plants in basements and in bunkers than to cultivate it in the light, because it is federally illegal."
Medical marijuana has been legal in Canada since 2000, and the country is working to broaden its program to include recreational use by this spring. The legal market is expected to generate $22.6 billion annually after the recreational market opens up.
Tantalus Labs was founded in 2012 in an effort to advance the way marijuana is cultivated. A team of scientists, designers, and engineers spent over two years designing the facility, and another two years constructing it. They looked to the agriculture industry for best practices.
"We take those core concepts and we iterate on them so we can provide consistency, not only in product output, but in [meeting] a pharmacological standard," Sutton said.
Tantalus Labs CentralBreezeway (Courtesy of Tantalus Labs)
The non-artificial sunlight helps the plants turn a rich green color and grow productive — or dense — buds. Plus, it helps Tantalus Labs save on electricity.
The facility cycles its air every seven minutes, which helps get rid of pests and prevents stale air from settling around the leaves of the plants and creating mold.
British Columbia gets lots of rain, so Tantalus Labs created a water recapture system on the facility's 120,000-square-foot roof. The rain is filtered, fed natural fertilizers, and pumped through an irrigation system that waters the plants.
Tantalus Labs SunLabSign (Courtesy of Tantalus Labs)
Sutton describes the future buyer as someone who is likely to shop at Whole Foods.
"Nature has done an excellent job of cultivating plants for the last billions of years. The closest we get to a natural strategy, the more effective we are," Sutton said.
420 Intel is Your Source for Marijuana News
420 Intel Canada is your leading news source for the Canadian cannabis industry. Get the latest updates on Canadian cannabis stocks and developments on how Canada continues to be a major player in the worldwide recreational and medical cannabis industry.
420 Intel Canada is the Canadian Industry news outlet that will keep you updated on how these Canadian developments in recreational and medical marijuana will impact the country and the world. Our commitment is to bring you the most important cannabis news stories from across Canada every day of the week.
Marijuana industry news is a constant endeavor with new developments each day. For marijuana news across the True North, 420 Intel Canada promises to bring you quality, Canadian, cannabis industry news.
You can get 420 Intel news delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for our daily marijuana news, ensuring you’re always kept up to date on the ever-changing cannabis industry. To stay even better informed about marijuana legalization news follow us on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.